Most CMMS rollouts fail in the same place: between phases.
The pilot site goes well. Then the team rushes into a wider rollout without scoring whether the pilot actually proved anything. Six months later, three sites are live, none of them are working properly, and nobody can say which phase broke first.
A CMMS rollout plan is supposed to prevent this. But most rollout plans you'll find online are timelines dressed up as plans, week 1, week 2, week 3, with no gates between them.
This is a different kind of plan. Every phase has its own scorecard. You don't move to the next phase until you pass the current one. That's how industrial maintenance teams, machinery OEMs, and asset-heavy manufacturers actually run a rollout that survives contact with the plant floor.
Why a Phased Rollout, Not a Big-Bang Deployment
The temptation for any maintenance manager under pressure is to roll the CMMS out everywhere at once. Buy the licenses, train everyone, flip the switch.
This fails for three predictable reasons:
- One bad pilot site contaminates trust across the whole organisation
- Technicians at multiple sites resist simultaneously, with no proven win to point to
- Data quality problems compound across sites instead of being caught in one place
A phased rollout solves all three. You prove the system works on one site, score it honestly, then expand only when the data says you're ready. Each phase becomes evidence for the next one.
This is the same logic that makes manufacturing line trials work, prove it on one line before you change the whole plant.
The Four-Phase Rollout Framework
The framework below covers four phases. Every phase has stage-gate criteria that must score pass before progression. If a phase fails its scorecard, you do not move forward, you fix the failure, rescore, and only then proceed.
Phase 1: Pilot Site Deployment (Weeks 1-8)
The pilot is one site, one line, or one OEM customer installation. Not three. Not "a few." One.
Pick the pilot deliberately. The best pilot site has:
- A maintenance team willing to engage
- Enough work order volume to generate meaningful data in 6-8 weeks
- A shift supervisor who will hold technicians accountable for using the system
- A mix of asset types representative of your broader operation
What happens in this phase: data migration for pilot assets, technician training, mobile CMMS deployment, work order management workflows configured, preventive maintenance schedules loaded, and live operation under real production conditions.
Phase 1 Stage-Gate Scorecard
Move to Phase 2 only if: at least 6 of 7 gates pass. If 5 or fewer pass, extend the pilot by 4 weeks and address the failures specifically. Do not proceed under any circumstances.
Phase 2: Wave 1 Expansion (Weeks 9-16)
Wave 1 is your second through fifth deployment sites or lines. The selection criterion here is similarity, pick sites with similar asset classes, similar workflows, and similar team structures to the pilot.
The reason is straightforward: you're testing whether your configuration scales, not whether it adapts. Don't introduce variables yet.
What happens in this phase: replicate the pilot configuration, run condensed training informed by pilot lessons, deploy to Wave 1 sites in staggered fashion (one per week), and track whether each site hits pilot-equivalent adoption rates.
Phase 2 Stage-Gate Scorecard
Move to Phase 3 only if: at least 6 of 7 gates pass AND the pilot site has not regressed. The pilot regression check is critical, if expanding to new sites is breaking the original site, your support model isn't ready for further scaling.
Phase 3: Wave 2 Expansion (Weeks 17-26)
Wave 2 is where complexity enters. These are the sites that are different from the pilot, different asset classes, different geographies, different team structures, or in the OEM case, different customer installations.
This is the phase where your configuration meets reality. You'll find that some workflows need adaptation, that certain asset types weren't represented in the pilot, and that one site has a shift supervisor who is going to be a problem.
What happens in this phase: site-by-site configuration adaptation (controlled, not free-for-all), expanded training that accounts for site-specific workflows, integration with adjacent systems where required, and stress-testing the reporting layer across a more diverse asset base.
Phase 3 Stage-Gate Scorecard
Move to Phase 4 only if: at least 6 of 7 gates pass AND no site is below 60% daily adoption. The adoption floor matters here, a single weak site will drag down the full deployment if you proceed without fixing it.
Phase 4: Full Deployment and Hypercare (Weeks 27-36)
Phase 4 covers the remaining sites and transitions the rollout into steady-state operation. Hypercare is the structured support window after full deployment, typically 8-12 weeks of elevated vendor support, daily monitoring, and rapid response to issues.
The goal of this phase is not to launch. It's to make the system durable.
What happens in this phase: deploy to remaining sites, lock down configuration changes (anything new goes through change control), monitor adoption and data quality daily, hold weekly hypercare reviews with the vendor, and prepare for handoff from project team to operations.
Phase 4 Stage-Gate Scorecard
Pass the rollout when: at least 6 of 7 gates pass. This is your formal completion criterion, without it, the rollout isn't done, regardless of what the project plan says.
Common Failure Modes by Phase
Each phase has predictable failure patterns. Knowing them in advance is the difference between a rescue and a write-off.
Phase 1 failures usually come from picking the wrong pilot site, too small to generate data, or too politically sensitive to fail honestly. Both lead to false-positive scorecards.
Phase 2 failures usually come from configuration drift, Wave 1 sites making "small" changes that compound. Lock the configuration in Phase 2. Adaptations happen in Phase 3.
Phase 3 failures usually come from underestimating site-specific complexity. The Wave 1 success creates overconfidence. Score Phase 3 harder than Phase 2, not softer.
Phase 4 failures usually come from premature project-team disengagement. The rollout looks done before hypercare proves it's durable. Hold the team in place through the full hypercare window.
Ownership and Stage-Gate Accountability
A scored rollout plan only works if someone owns the score.
The recommended ownership pattern:
- Maintenance manager owns Phase 1 and Phase 2 scorecards
- Operations leader owns Phase 3 scorecard
- Plant manager or VP operations owns the Phase 4 final sign-off
- Vendor implementation lead is accountable for the configuration and data inputs to each scorecard but does not own the pass/fail decision
The pass/fail decision must sit with the customer. If you let the vendor score their own rollout, you will get the rollout the vendor wants, not the one your operation needs.
How Makula Supports a Phased Rollout
Makula is built for industrial maintenance teams running multi-site rollouts, OEM after-sales operations deploying to customer installations, machinery distributors rolling out to service depots, and asset-heavy manufacturers scaling across production sites.
A few things matter specifically for a phased deployment:
Mobile-first technician workflows. Work orders, fault codes, and asset history capture are designed for the floor, not for an office admin. That makes Phase 1 adoption scorecards realistic instead of aspirational.
Offline mode reliability. Technicians in low-connectivity zones can complete work orders without data loss, a frequent failure point in Phase 1 and Phase 2 scorecards for other systems.
Cross-site reporting. Plant managers and operations leaders get site-comparison views without manual data reconciliation, which is what makes Phase 3 stage gates passable in the first place.
Time-based preventive maintenance. Calendar, runtime, and cycle-count PM schedules are designed around how industrial maintenance teams actually plan work, not around predictive maintenance assumptions that may not fit your operation.
If your rollout depends on technician adoption, mobile reliability, and cross-site reporting clarity, Makula is built to be evaluated against exactly those criteria, phase by phase.
Book a Demo with Makula, and structure your rollout plan with phase scorecards from the start, not in week 12 when something breaks.
Conclusion
A CMMS rollout plan is not a timeline. It's a sequence of gates.
If each phase passes its scorecard before the next one begins, the rollout becomes durable. If you skip the scoring and rely on the calendar, you end up with a CMMS that's technically deployed and practically ignored.
Score the phases. Hold the gates. The rollout you finish with will be the one you actually wanted.


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